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Poll

If Pope Pius XII had put St. Joseph in the Canon, what would you have done?

I would accept the change and attend St. Joseph Masses
19 (61.3%)
I would not accept the change and would attend only dissident non-St. Joseph Masses
1 (3.2%)
I would accept the change and attend either St. Joseph Masses or non-St. Joseph Masses
11 (35.5%)

Total Members Voted: 31

Voting closed: February 03, 2024, 11:15:00 AM

Author Topic: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass  (Read 51599 times)

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Offline Texana

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Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
« Reply #60 on: January 29, 2024, 07:04:19 PM »
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  • Angelus,

    My reference to the "divine elements" comes from a quote by Pax from Mediator Dei:


    What are the "divine elements"? The sacramental form is certainly a divine element. So my position is supported there. If you want to say "divine elements" are broader than that, give your authority.

    The Canon of the Missal of Pius V is certainly laid out in that Missal. Of course. That's not an eternal, universal definition of a Canon that cannot be changed.

    I've already addressed your argument about the Trentian canon. No, it doesn't say what you say it does. Quote me some authority, other than yourself, that the Canon of the Missal of Pius V, or a specific Canon in use by the Church at one point (and it has been changed), can't be changed.







    Dear DecemRationis,
    We will need the definition of the "liturgy" to address Mediator Dei. Thank you.

    Offline Angelus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #61 on: January 29, 2024, 07:13:18 PM »
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  • First, I don't think the CE article supports the reading you want to impose on it. Secondly, if it did support your position, I don't think it has much weight, not as much as Leo XIII and Magisterial sources. I certainly wouldn't cease inquiry and study on what it says, and I'm not.

    If you want to establish that the issue of the Canon is settled, you're going to have to come up with some authority, since the CE doesn't have authority to settle anything - it can only refer to the settlement by the true authority, the Magisterium. So . . . where is it? It's not Quo Primum, which St. Pius V himself says is but his "statute, ordinance, command, precept," etc.

    Instead of reading the CE, go back and read Quo Primum more closely. 


    DR, the authority is the Council of Trent. I have already said that at least 3-4 times. Here is the canon from Session XXII again:


    Quote
    CANON VI.--If any one saith, that the canon of the mass contains errors, and is therefore to be abrogated; let him be anathema.

    The same concept (i.e., that the Canon of the Mass cannot be changed after Trent) is enshrined in Quo Primum by Pius V. 

    And my interpretation of the meaning and impact of Canon VI and Quo Primum is simply confirmed by the Catholic Encylopedia article when it says the following:


    Quote
    The Council of Trent (1545-63) restrained this tendency and ordered that "the holy Canon composed many centuries ago" should be kept pure and unchanged; it also condemned those who say that the "Canon of the Mass contains errors and should be abolished" (Sess. XXII., cap. iv. can. vi; Denzinger, 819, 830). Pope Pius V (1566-72) published an authentic edition of the Roman Missal in 1570, and accompanied it with a Bull forbidding anyone to either add, or in any way change any part of it.

    The CE article is not itself the authority. It simply provides the evidence that the Catholic Church interpreted Canon VI and Quo Primum to mean that the Canon of the Mass must remain "unchanged." Canon VI of Session XXII of Trent is the ultimate authority with Quo Primum (which is a Papal Bull, the most formal type of papal communication) as the confirmation from the Pope.


    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #62 on: January 29, 2024, 07:18:45 PM »
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  • Dear DecemRationis,

    You are very close. Please expand on your sentence "...Sacrament of Eucharist of which the Mass is the vehicle."
    "Canon" refers to the Canon of the Mass; what is this vehicle called...? Additionally, could you give the definitions of the word, "sacrament", and of "Sacrament of the Eucharist"; we will need it. Thank you.

    Can you help me out a bit?  I'm not looking for a part-time job. :laugh1:
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #63 on: January 29, 2024, 07:45:06 PM »
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  • DR, the authority is the Council of Trent. I have already said that at least 3-4 times. Here is the canon from Session XXII again:


    The same concept (i.e., that the Canon of the Mass cannot be changed after Trent) is enshrined in Quo Primum by Pius V.

    And my interpretation of the meaning and impact of Canon VI and Quo Primum is simply confirmed by the Catholic Encylopedia article when it says the following:


    The CE article is not itself the authority. It simply provides the evidence that the Catholic Church interpreted Canon VI and Quo Primum to mean that the Canon of the Mass must remain "unchanged." Canon VI of Session XXII of Trent is the ultimate authority with Quo Primum (which is a Papal Bull, the most formal type of papal communication) as the confirmation from the Pope.

    You're just repeating yourself. If the CE supports your reading, and you're both right, surely you can come up with some other pre-V2 support.

    I'm still digging and inquiring on this issue, and you should be doing the same if you want to continue this discussion.
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #64 on: January 29, 2024, 07:55:56 PM »
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  • DR, the authority is the Council of Trent. I have already said that at least 3-4 times. Here is the canon from Session XXII again:


    The same concept (i.e., that the Canon of the Mass cannot be changed after Trent) is enshrined in Quo Primum by Pius V.

    And my interpretation of the meaning and impact of Canon VI and Quo Primum is simply confirmed by the Catholic Encylopedia article when it says the following:


    The CE article is not itself the authority. It simply provides the evidence that the Catholic Church interpreted Canon VI and Quo Primum to mean that the Canon of the Mass must remain "unchanged." Canon VI of Session XXII of Trent is the ultimate authority with Quo Primum (which is a Papal Bull, the most formal type of papal communication) as the confirmation from the Pope.


    While the law issued by a pontiff is pending - as it was after Pius V issued it, and when the CE was written - of course no one could add to it or change it.

    The article simply doesn't support a position that a subsequent pope couldn't alter the canon or other nonessential prayers used in the sacramental rite in a new or revised missal.
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.


    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #65 on: January 30, 2024, 06:22:48 AM »
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  • As I said in one of my posts above, I'm still digging and inquiring on this issue of whether the Church can change the Canon. I found this, from Patrick Omlor's book, The Robber Church, helpful in that inquiry:


    Quote
    The Church Has Spoken

    Regarding this limitation of the rights and powers of the Pope and the Church there are at least four clear-cut pronouncements of the Magisterium; and all four may be found in Denzinger's Enchiridion Symbolorum, the most authoritative compendium of definitions and declarations relating to matters of faith and morals.

    (1) In the letter, Super quibusdam (Sept. 29, 1351), Pope Clement VI taught: "(T)he Roman Pontiff regarding the administration of the sacraments of the Church, can tolerate and even permit different rites of the Church of Christ.... always without violating those things which pertain to the integrity and necessary parts of the sacraments."

    (2) The Council of Trent, Session XXI, Chap. 2: "It (the Council) declares furthermore that this power has always been in the Church, that in the administration of the sacraments, without violating their substance, she may determine or change whatever she may judge to be more expedient for the benefit of those who receive them or for the veneration of the sacraments, according to the variety of circuмstances, times and places."

    (3) Pope St. Pius X in the letter, Ex quo, nono (Dec. 26,1910): "(I)t is well known that to the Church there belongs no right whatsoever to innovate anything touching on the substance of the sacraments."

    (4) And, finally, on Nov. 30, 1947, Pope Pius XII issued the apostolic constitution, Sacramentum Ordinis, which reiterates and clarifies this same principle: "(A)s the Council of Trent teaches, the seven sacraments of the New Law have all been instituted by Jesus Christ, our Lord, and the Church has no power over the 'substance of the sacraments,' that is, over those things which, with the sources of divine revelation as witnesses, Christ the Lord Himself decreed to be preserved in a sacramental sign."

    Forceful and unmistakably clear is the language of St. Pius X: "no right whatsoever." And Pius XII's words, "no power," are equally unequivocal. These prohibitions, be it noted, refer to "the substance" of the sacraments.


    Substance vs. Ceremony

    Before going into the meaning of "substance" of a sacrament, it may perhaps be useful to consider some aspects of the sacraments that do not fall under this concept. In his bull, Apostolicae Curae, Pope Leo XIII lays down an important distinction: "In the rite for the performance and administration of any sacrament a distinction is justly made between its 'ceremonial' and its 'essential' part, the latter being usually called its 'matter and form.'" Thus, although the Church is forbidden to change, or even touch, the matter or form of any sacrament, She may indeed change or abolish or introduce something in the nonessential rites, or "ceremonial" parts, used in the administration of the sacraments, such as processions, prayers or hymns before or after the actual words of the form are recited, etc.

    But every Catholic should know that not even the Pope can rule (for example) that alcohol may be used instead of water as the matter of the Sacrament of Baptism; or that the words, "I christen you, William," may be used as the form instead of, "I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Innovations such as these would be examples of touching, or violating the substance of a sacrament.

    Substance of a Sacrament

    As is generally explained by theologians, the substance of a sacrament consists of those elements of the sacrament which are absolutely necessary in order to have the sacrament; viz.,the matter and the form. By the matter is meant the specific, determinate, sensible thing or things used in the external rite of the sacrament; for example, water in Baptism, bread and wine in the Holy Eucharist. The form is the sequence of specific, determinate words pronounced by the minister of the sacrament. "The word," says St. Augustine, "is joined to the element, and it becomes a sacrament."

    Addis and Arnold's Catholic Dictionary comments thus: "The Council of Trent defines that though the Church may change rites and ceremonies, it cannot alter the 'substance' of the sacraments. This follows from the very nature of a sacrament. The matter and form have no power in themselves to give grace. This power depends solely on the will of God, Who has made the grace promised depend on the use of certain things and words, so that if these are altered in their essence the sacrament is altogether absent."

    Our present inquiry, related specifically to the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, is whether or not this substitution of the words "for all men" in place of "for many" in the consecration form constitutes a forbidden violation of the substance of the Sacrament. And therefore we should also consider a certain distinguishing feature of this Sacrament; namely, that it was instituted in specie. As we read in The Catholic Encyclopedia (V. XIII, p. 299, 1913 ed.): "Christ determined what special graces were to be conferred by means of external rites: for some sacraments (e.g. baptism, the Eucharist) He determined minutely (in specie) the matter and form: for others He determined only in a general way (in genere) that there should be an external ceremony, by which special graces were to be conferred, leaving to the Apostles or to the Church the power to determine whatever He had not determined, e.g. to prescribe the matter and form of the Sacraments of Confirmation and Holy Orders." Since the Holy Eucharist was instituted in specie (and all theologians agree upon this), Our Lord Himself at the Last Supper having specified the exact words of the form, there was absolutely nothing left to the Church to determine in this respect.

    Wayback Machine (archive.org) (pages 79-81)


    I also now know where Rama P. Coomaraswamy (Reply #54) got his quote of Leo XIII from - Patrick Omlor.
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #66 on: January 30, 2024, 08:21:15 AM »
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  • While the law issued by a pontiff is pending - as it was after Pius V issued it, and when the CE was written - of course no one could add to it or change it.

    The article simply doesn't support a position that a subsequent pope couldn't alter the canon or other nonessential prayers used in the sacramental rite in a new or revised missal.

    Agreed.  I too have never found a principle where a Pope couldn't make some modifications to the parts of the Canon other than the essential form, much less add or remove names to the Communicantes, which was in fact, as Elwin pointed out, occuring during some periods prior to Quo Primum and which the Pope restricted, but it's also a restriction the Pope could lift.

    What one Pope binds, another is free to loose ... other than what's of Divine Law or Divine Institution (i.e. the substance of the Sacraments).

    I can't think of anything that's more slight a change and does not alter meaning than adding a specific name to the Communicantes, which virtually includes all the saints anyways by concluding "and of all the saints".  Calling out a specific name from "all the saints" does not change the meaning in any way and would only be a way to call to mind a specific saint and give them some special honor.

    Offline Texana

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #67 on: January 30, 2024, 08:23:51 AM »
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  • DR, the authority is the Council of Trent. I have already said that at least 3-4 times. Here is the canon from Session XXII again:


    The same concept (i.e., that the Canon of the Mass cannot be changed after Trent) is enshrined in Quo Primum by Pius V.

    And my interpretation of the meaning and impact of Canon VI and Quo Primum is simply confirmed by the Catholic Encylopedia article when it says the following:


    The CE article is not itself the authority. It simply provides the evidence that the Catholic Church interpreted Canon VI and Quo Primum to mean that the Canon of the Mass must remain "unchanged." Canon VI of Session XXII of Trent is the ultimate authority with Quo Primum (which is a Papal Bull, the most formal type of papal communication) as the confirmation from the Pope.
    Dear Angelus,

    Thank you for pressing the point home! 2Vermont brought up the topic of "liturgy". It needs to be addressed. You are very good in finding things in Canon Law. Could you please quote what is the relationship of a pope and the law itself to the liturgy, and give us the list of the liturgical books of the Church. Finally, please give the definition of the word "control" (Webster's is fine). Thank you. 


    Offline DecemRationis

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    Another bull by Pius V, "Quod a Nobis" (regarding the Breviary)
    « Reply #68 on: January 31, 2024, 06:51:09 AM »
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  • Continuing my research on this issue, some other relevant information.

    Pius V issued a bull, "Quod a Nobis," regarding his reform or standardization of the breviary. I can't find a translation of the bull, but the following comments appear relevant to "Quo Primum" and Pius V's missal.


    Quote
    "Quo Primum is primarily a legal docuмent promulgating use of a certain liturgical book within the Latin Church. As a legal and administrative act it cannot bind a successor of equal status should he take the proper steps to depart from it.

    Neither Pius V, nor any following pope, thought it was such. Two years earlier the same Pius V published Quod a nobis promulgating a Roman Breviary for general use which contains the same rules of use and prohibitions against alterations and threats of Divine retribution as Quo Primum. Urban VIII did not go into schism or heresy by changing the hymns and no one has suggested the 1911 breviary changes were illegal or invalid (although they were unwise)."


    The Rad Trad: On the Validity and Legality of the Mass of Paul VI

    Some posts by Father Hunwicke from his blog:



    Quote
    There are two pervasive myths about S Pius V's liturgical interventions which will doubtless go on being purveyed until the Eschaton.

    (1) That he suppressed the local rites of the Middle Ages, only permitting the survival of those which had existed for more than 200 years. He was a centraliser and a standardiser.

    (2) That his actions, following on from Trent, are closely analogous to, and provide a close precedent for, what Paul VI did after Vatican II.

    Each of these myths is a travesty of history. Each results from a reading of History with the hindsight of knowing What Happened Afterwards, instead of trying to understand events in their own historical contexts. Since devils reside in details, and since I have written before about what he did with his Missal, I shall focus today on what he did to the Breviary.

    The papal docuмent Quod a nobis, which introduces the 'Tridentine Breviary', repays careful reading. The Divine Office put in place by Gelasius and Gregory and reformed by Gregory VII had, S Pius tells us, diverged ab antiqua constitutione. So the pope wishes it to be recalled ad pristinam orandi regulam. Some people had deformed this praeclara constitutio by mutilations and changes; an awful lot of people (plurimi) had been seduced (allecti) by the brevity of a Breviary produced by the Spanish Cardinal Quignon. Even worse, in provincias paulatim irrepserat prava illa consuetudo ["that depraved custom"], namely, that bishops in churches which, from the beginning, had used the Roman Office, were producing privatum sibi quisquam Breviarium.

    What S Pius V is dealing with here is the chaotic liturgical result of a century of printing. It may be difficult for us to appropriate imaginatively the differences that this invention made. Only in the age of this new technology could trendy clergy buy and use in vast numbers the new slick and fast Quignon Breviary; only now could meddling bishops, full of Good Ideas, thrust their latest clever novelties with ease upon their helpless dioceses. The words of S Pius seem almost to describe the chaos which was to follow under Pius XII and his successors: "Hence the total disruption of divine worship in so many places; hence a complete ignorance among the clergy of ecclesiastical rites and ceremonies; so that numberless ministers of the churches carry out their duty unbecomingly, not without enormous offence to the devout".

    S Pius was reacting to to this technology-driven chaos by a reinstatement of Tradition; by the elimination of novelty and by a return to what had been received. Hence, he provided a form of the Roman Breviary carefully emended by the best scholarship available to him. It was, of course, a paradox that his reform was itself carried through by the use of the same technology which had created the problem!! But that paradox does nothing to change the fact that his action was an assertion of Tradition, a repression of innovation.

    S Pius V's reform was thus an act of deliberate and profound conservatism. This is shown by his treatment of local usages which dated from well before the invention of printing. As for uses which were of more than two centuries standing: "that ancient right of saying and singing their office, we do not take away". Recognising, however, that many who possessed such ancient usages might nevertheless themselves prefer the revision which he is now promulgating, he permits them to adopt it, but only if the Bishop and the entire chapter agree. Entire!! Come-lately diocesans were thereby restrained, according to the words of this legislation, from abolishing the ancient uses of their churches; apparently, it needed only one curmudgeonly traditionalist on the Chapter to interpose his veto and thus to preserve the local customs. This seems to me a fairly rigorous affirmation of the the traditional diversities with which a process of organically evolving liturgy had endowed local churches, combined with a determination to eliminate novel fancies which had corrupted liturgy since printing made it easy for hierarchs to impose their whimsies. I wonder what he might have said could he have known that, four hundred years later, his own successors would be using printing to impose their whimsies!

    S Pius V's reforms, as I have said, are commonly described as symptoms of counter-reformation centralisation and as an attempt rigorously to standardise the worship of the Latin Church. I think this profoundly and anachronistically misreads both the liturgical situation which he is addressing; and the legal framework which he carefully puts in place. Previous popes had fairly recently flirted with the idea of radical revisions of the Breviary, intending thus to bring it into line with the ('Humanist') fashions of their age. But in S Pius V, a truly great pontiff, we see at its very best the ancient function of the Roman Church as a remora against innovation; as well as an assertion of the principle that the Tradition is not ours to destroy, but to hand on carefully with - as Vatican II actually says - only such changes as grow organically out of what is already there, and are truly necessary. (Among later pontiffs, perhaps Benedict XIV came closest to the instincts of S Pius V.)

    If S Pius V had been a B Paul VI, he would have confirmed and extended the papal permission for the use of the Quignon breviary; he would have encouraged diocesan bishops to forge ahead with their own 'inculturations'. He did nothing of the sort; he did the opposite. Perhaps the only faint resemblance to the events of the 1960s is S Pius's somewhat root-and-branch approach to a Calendar which had become overloaded (calendars constantly silt up and then need to be dredged; it's a natural cycle like the successions of ice ages and interglacials)*. But that had the result of revealing old Roman treasures which an excessive Sanctorale had left unchanged in the physical texts while the newer insertions had been preventing their actual use. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was those archaic features themselves that fell victim to an elite in a hurry (during this Advent season, we might particularly remember the demise of the old Excita Sunday collects).

    You are entitled to think what you like about the events of the 1960s. I have no power to pop you into my own personal private prison! But please do not go around saying that what B Paul VI did after Vatican II was indistinguishable from S Pius V had done after Trent.



    Fr Hunwicke's Mutual Enrichment: S Pius V (originally posted February 2014) (liturgicalnotes.blogspot.com)

    . . .

    From a comment on another post on the blog:

    S. Pius speaks of the Council's requirement to revise the Catechism, Missal, and Breviary. Next, I believe he gives the clue to the interpretation of Quo Primum: "edito jam, Deo ipso annuente, ad populi eruditionem Catechismo, et ad debitas Deo persolvendas laudes Breviario castigato, omnino, ut Breviario Missale responderet, ut congruum est et conveniens (cuм unum in Ecclesia Dei psallendi modum, unum Missae celebrandae ritum esse maxime deceat), necesse jam videbatur, ut, quod reliquum in hac parte esset, de ipso nempe Missali edendo, quam primum cogitaremus." So he's saying we did the Catechism, we did the Breviary, and so that there is congruity between the Divine Office and Mass, now we're doing the Missal.

    So perhaps we can go back to Quod a nobis (1568) (link to text--Latin only, here's one in Spanish) to see why and to what ends the Breviary was revised. If the Mass was revised to conform to the Breviary, then maybe we can get some support for the printing-press theory there. Quod a nobis is the bull condemning, among other things, the Quignones breviary. This Bull seems the same as Quo Primum: there are a lot of breviaries out there--he calls out Quignones' work by name and abolishes it--and the desire of the committee of scholars is (as in Quo primum) to restore the "antiqua institutione" or "veteris Breviarii". The scholars did their work, says Pius, and we have a new--the new--Breviary. All others are then abolished other than those approved by the Apostolic See or those claiming 200 years' vintage.



    Fr Hunwicke's Mutual Enrichment: S Pius V: the BIG MISTAKE, THE UNIVERSAL MYTH (liturgicalnotes.blogspot.com)

    . . .

    Another correspondent writing from the Middle East offers the parallel case of the 1568 docuмent "Quod a Nobis" which introduced the new Roman breviary two years before the new missal. This docuмent contains many expressions similar to "Quo Primum" regarding, for instance, the perpetual force of law, the obligation of use in all places, and the total prohibition of adding or omitting anything.

    Our reader then comments: "As you are undoubtedly aware, St. Pius X radically rearranged the ancient Roman Psalter and changed a few lessons for a few days, and provided contracted lessons, among other changes in 1913. Moreover, he forbade the use of the old Psalter. This clearly shows that he was not bound by the prescriptions issued in 'Quod a Nobis' and since these are similar to those of 'Quo Primum,' those must not be binding either.

    "I have found using 'Quod a Nobis' more effective because the adherents to 'Quo Primum' argue that it is restricted to the Ordinary (either whole or from the Offertory to Last Gospel), or to the Temporale only (despite evidence in encyclicals like 'Grande Munus' to the contrary). Since the Psalter is the most fundamental part of the breviary, no such statement can be made with regard to 'Quod a Nobis.'" ZE06111422



    Pius V's 1570 Bull | EWTN

    Of course, there's a lot of tendentious stuff out there on the Canon of the Mass - Sedes, R & R Trads, Conservative and Liberal Novus Ordites . . . But you can usually smell that out when arguments and issues are pressed. As with everything else, objective sifting and attempts at honesty are required . . . as far as we are able with our biases.

    Let the "facts" speak, as always.

    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

    Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #69 on: January 31, 2024, 07:36:30 AM »
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  • Perhaps, then, St. Pius X incurred the penalties of Quod a nobis and was therefore a non-pope.  :laugh1:

    As often happens, the exaggeration of Quo primum comes from a reaction, and then an overreaction, to Montini's Prot rewrite of the Mass.  People are looking for some simplistic, easy, legalistic way to invalidate it ... except that SVs just say it's as simple as the fact that Montini was no pope.

    Offline Stubborn

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #70 on: January 31, 2024, 07:57:44 AM »
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  • Perhaps, then, St. Pius X incurred the penalties of Quod a nobis and was therefore a non-pope.  :laugh1:

    As often happens, the exaggeration of Quo primum comes from a reaction, and then an overreaction, to Montini's Prot rewrite of the Mass.  People are looking for some simplistic, easy, legalistic way to invalidate it ... except that SVs just say it's as simple as the fact that Montini was no pope.
    To say as you said previous, what one pope binds, another is free to loosen, is to say that the authority of the pope is limited.

    This is to say QP of Pope St. Pius V did not have the authority to bind all his successors, which is to say that apparently, Pope St. Pius V attempted to do something which he had no authority to do. 

    This is what you are saying.

    To paraphrase Fr. Wathen; And we say well then, if he did not have that authority then his authority was limited. We say that if his authority is limited, then all his successors' authority is limited also.

    We say yes, the authority of the pope is limited, but it is not limited to establishing the liturgy of the Mass for all time, rather, it is limited to where a successor cannot discard this Mass because of a whimsy or a deviation in Catholic belief, and there has to be a deviation in Catholic belief on the part of pope Paul VI who would introduce such a mass  as what we have, the Novus Ordo Missae.

    All this is to say it has nothing whatsoever to do with the idea that "it's as simple as the fact that Montini was no pope."


    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse


    Offline Texana

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    Re: Another bull by Pius V, "Quod a Nobis" (regarding the Breviary)
    « Reply #71 on: January 31, 2024, 09:22:45 AM »
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  • Continuing my research on this issue, some other relevant information.

    Pius V issued a bull, "Quod a Nobis," regarding his reform or standardization of the breviary. I can't find a translation of the bull, but the following comments appear relevant to "Quo Primum" and Pius V's missal.


    Some posts by Father Hunwicke from his blog:



    Of course, there's a lot of tendentious stuff out there on the Canon of the Mass - Sedes, R & R Trads, Conservative and Liberal Novus Ordites . . . But you can usually smell that out when arguments and issues are pressed. As with everything else, objective sifting and attempts at honesty are required . . . as far as we are able with our biases.

    Let the "facts" speak, as always.
    Dear DecemRationis,
    What is the difference between The Breviary and the Canon of the Mass?

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #72 on: January 31, 2024, 09:30:12 AM »
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  • To say as you said previous, what one pope binds, another is free to loosen, is to say that the authority of the pope is limited.

    Well, of course the Pope's authority is limited.  He cannot, for instance, change things that are of Divine Law (or its extension in natural law).  But it's a basic principle of law that an equal cannot bind an equal.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #73 on: January 31, 2024, 09:37:34 AM »
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  • This is to say QP of Pope St. Pius V did not have the authority to bind all his successors, which is to say that apparently, Pope St. Pius V attempted to do something which he had no authority to do.

    There's no reason to believe St. Pius V ever thought he could bind future popes.  He bound all those whom he had the authority to bind.

    St. Pius V used the same language in fixing the Roman Breviary ... and yet somehow St. Pius X didn't consider himself bound by it.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: Pius XII and St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass
    « Reply #74 on: January 31, 2024, 09:39:54 AM »
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  • To say as you said previous, what one pope binds, another is free to loosen, is to say that the authority of the pope is limited.

    This is to say QP of Pope St. Pius V did not have the authority to bind all his successors, which is to say that apparently, Pope St. Pius V attempted to do something which he had no authority to do.

    This is what you are saying.

    To paraphrase Fr. Wathen; And we say well then, if he did not have that authority then his authority was limited. We say that if his authority is limited, then all his successors' authority is limited also.

    We say yes, the authority of the pope is limited, but it is not limited to establishing the liturgy of the Mass for all time, rather, it is limited to where a successor cannot discard this Mass because of a whimsy or a deviation in Catholic belief, and there has to be a deviation in Catholic belief on the part of pope Paul VI who would introduce such a mass  as what we have, the Novus Ordo Missae.

    All this is to say it has nothing whatsoever to do with the idea that "it's as simple as the fact that Montini was no pope."

    Your paradigm relies upon the a faulty legal analysis to explain why Montini had no authority to change the Mass, because you refuse to accept the fact that Popes are protected by the Holy Spirit from vitiating (damaging) the Sacred Liturgy.  Because Montini wrecked the Mass, that's a clear indication of the fact that Montini lacked said protection, i.e. that he was not the pope.